Fluxblog
June 18th, 2020 11:30pm

A Wonderful Vision Of The City Today


Sonic Youth “Saucer-Like”

Sonic Youth’s records have a way of reflecting the environments in which they were made – Confusion Is Sex and Sister evoke different angles on the gritty Manhattan of the ’80s, Experimental Jet Set Trash and No Star is a snapshot of downtown Manhattan just as a new wave of gentrification set in, and Murray Street and Sonic Nurse have an open and pastoral feel that made sense given that half the band had moved out to Western Massachusetts.

Washing Machine, released in 1995 only a year after Experimental Jet Set, covers similar ground but it conjures up very different weather. Whereas Experimental Jet Set sounds like overcast skies and cramped subways, Washing Machine feels like walking around the city on a gorgeous sunny day. The guitar tones are clean and bright, and the music feels light and spacious, largely because there’s very little bass guitar on the record. The classic Sonic Youth tension and noise is still there to signify the city-ness of it all, but the palette brings out the beauty of the place rather than the grime.

Lee Ranaldo sings on two Washing Machine songs – “Skip Tracer” and “Saucer-Like” – and his lyrics directly address living in the city. In a sense they are two sides of a thematic coin, with “Skip Tracer” written from the perspective of a New Yorker who feels out of place anywhere else – “L.A. is more confusing now than anywhere I’ve ever been to, I’m from New York City, breathe it out and let it in” – and “Saucer-Like” is more about drifting along in Manhattan and embracing the joy to be had in feeling small in this grand and densely populated place.

A lot of writing about New York tends to be about someone feeling as though the city and its people are encroaching on them in some way, like it’s this external pressure sapping their energy and driving them mad. “Saucer-Like” is the opposite, in which internal anxieties dissolve just by going out into the world and watching so much life go on all around you. “I’m having a wonderful vision of the city today,” he sings during the bridge, observing the landscape and architecture, and boats coming into docks along the coast. He sounds so grounded and grateful to be “just a little free,” and fully present in his surroundings while lost in his thoughts.

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